Banjos Aren’t Just for Bluegrass

Blackgrass uses traditional instruments in nontraditional ways

by Patrick Corcoran

 


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 photographer, a hospital orderly, a social worker, and an actor walk into a bar.... While this may sound like the open­ing to an excruciatingly bad joke, that somewhat oddly matched foursome is the foundation of Blackgrass, one of Knoxville’s more unusual musical outfits. The band walked into a bar together in April to cele­brate the release of its debut album, Thirteen, and is slated to play next at Barley’s June 14.

Lead singer Scott Trow­bridge, a social worker by day, labels his band banjo rockers. Blackgrass formed out of the remains of Sunday School, a group that included both Trowbridge and drummer Roman Karpynec, who is an actor and filmmaker.

Following that band’s breakup, Scott said he searched Knoxville’s music scene for a musician interested in playing in a banjo or accordion rock band. A friend con­nected Trowbridge with Joshua Hurston Hall, a hospital employee in Crossville who became the band’s banjo player. Shortly thereafter, Trowbridge recruited longtime pal and local photographer Christian Lange as the violinist, and the Blackgrass lineup was set.

If “banjo rockers” sounds a little incon­gruous, well, it is. Fans and band mem­bers alike agree that such contrast results in compelling music. “I don’t think any of us really fit in with each other in the traditional sense,” Lange says. “That’s what makes the project so interesting to me. You have all these people from totally different backgrounds that share a com­mon Vision for the band’s sound.”

A rock music fan, Hall agrees that the appeal of banjo rock music is in its indi­viduality. “Blackgrass is just a nice differ­ent piece of the puzzle,” Hall says. “It just feels good to be weird.” Also described as Goth-twang and

Appalachian punk, among other genre-bending labels, Blackgrass doesn’t sound much like anything else around. Listing Reverend Glasseye and Sixteen Horse­power as musical contemporaries, Trow­bridge says that the banjo rock scene is grossly underexposed. “There’s really not a

lot.” Like any outfit with a violin, banjo, and upright bass, Black­grass is often lumped with blue­grass, but the tag is misleading.

“We play maybe one bluegrass  song,” Trowbridge says. The band

sounds nothing like the Stanley Brothers, relying more on rock struc­tures and tempos. With the crashing cymbals and relentless rhythms, Karpynec’s percussion brings an element of John Bonham to the mix.

Although banjo-player Hall grew up among a noted family of bluegrass musi­cians, his experience was primarily as a drummer in alternative rock bands.

Lange also adds an unusual element, with a violin background entirely devoid of any formal classical or bluegrass train­ing. “I’m self-taught on the violin,” Lange says. ‘I've always played with rock and jazz musicians, ever since I was a kid.” Trowbridge says Lange’s musical back­ground is ideal for Blackgrass. “I thought he’d be a real good match.”

Trowbridge writes with the dark tinge expected of a band that calls itself Black-grass. “My songs are a lot more Old Testa­ment than New Testament,” he says. An amalgam of religious references and vio­lent imagery color most songs, with unfor­gettable lines like “Yea, though I walk through valley of the shadow of death! I will fear no evil I’ve got a shotgun with a pistol grip.”

When Blackgrass pulls it all together, the result is often stunning. rj~0wbrjdge’s feel for quirky religious dilemmas, most evident in “God Sings the Blues” and “To Give Up Religion for Lent,” meshes wonderfully with the haunting banjo-rock backdrop. Black­grass’s best material combines thought provoking lyrics with often upbeat music, resulting in an overwhelningly distinc­tive sound.

Trowbridge says he set out to form a band specifically around the banjo because he thought the instrument was an ideal complement to his 5ongwriting.

“It’s like my dad always said: ‘Welcome to Heaven, here’s your harp; welcome to Hell, here’s your banjo,” he says. “I thought the banjo was just a great instru­ment for the types of songs I wrote.”

 

The band’s debut was very much a homespun operation. Lange designed Thir­teen’s packaging~ a perfect complement to the somber music within. The album was self~pr0duced, a process Trowbridge described as fun. Thirteen was recorded in the basement studio of Mary Ellen Coleman who is also Trowbridge's

The band has played in Cincinnati and ~hattano0ga and hopes the CD will lead to more out-of-t0~ gigs. “We hope ~ be able to play out of town more with the CD. It’s hard to get your foot in the door at some place where nobody knows YOU, Trowbridge says.

‘Whether other cities follow suit, KnoxVilli~5 are coming to know the memorable lyrics and singular sound of the city’s foremost banjo rockers.

 

 

From June 12, 2003 Metro Pulse